NEWS: Cyborg and Nightwing Revealed for Injustice: Gods Among Us

Now Batman and Superman can beat up a former Batman sidekick and a partial robot.

Two more characters from the DC Universe, Nightwing and Cyborg, have been added to Injustice: Gods Among Us' roster.

The Wii U game, developed by Mortal Kombat studio Netherrealm, stars a cast of DC characters. In addition to the two newly revealed characters, Batman, Superman, The Flash, Wonder Woman, Harley Quinn, and Solomon Grundy are confirmed. Lex Luthor has appeared in his robot suit in art, but his playable status hasn't been officially revealed.

Nightwing is the guise that the original Robin, Dick Grayson, dons after he grows out of his sidekick role. Cyborg, a half-man/half-robot, is best known for being a Teen Titan. In the recent DC relaunch, he is a founding member of the Justice League.

Injustice is set for a 2013 release on Wii U and other HD platforms.

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NEWS: Cyborg and Nightwing Revealed for Injustice: Gods Among Us

SDCC 2012: Nightwing and Cyborg Join 'Injustice: Gods Among Us'

As expected, the 2012 San Diego Comic-Con International show is full of announcements and DC Entertainment, along with Warner Bros. Interactive, have just revealed two new characters heading to the Injustice: Gods Among Us lineup Cyborg and Nightwing! Head past the break for more info and screens!

For those of you who haven't been paying attention to the folks over at NetherRealm Studios (Mortal Kombat) Injustice is an all-new fighting game franchise featuring some of the coolest and most popular characters from the DC Comics universe.

As you know, Cyborg and Nightwing were just added to the game's lineup today, but there will be many others joining the fray when the game launches in 2013, including Batman, Harley Quinn, Solomon Grundy, Superman, The Flash, Wonder Woman and many more.

The game is slated for release on Xbox 360, PS3 and the upcoming Wii U from Nintendo. Scroll down for some nice big screens of the newly announced competitors and fill the comments section with the DC characters you'd like to see make their way to Injustice: Gods Among Us.

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SDCC 2012: Nightwing and Cyborg Join 'Injustice: Gods Among Us'

See Cyborg and Nightwing in 'Injustice: Gods Among Us'

4 hrs.

Todd Kenreck

The fighting game set in the D.C. Universe already had an all-star line up, but now Cyborg and Nightwing are jumping into the super-hero and villain fray. I played the game at E3 this year and I can confirm it's incredibly fun, and with good reason; NetherRealm Studios, which made Mortal Kombat, is building the game.

Besides a unique wager system, interactive environments and even tailored super moves for every character, there's also a new D.C. Universe story in which the lines between good and evil have been "blurred."

Other D.C. Universe characters included so far:

Iexpect more characters will berevealed soon (there is no way they'rereleasing this game without the Joker).

Ifyou have a favorite character in the game or you feel there is one they have missed hit me up on my Facebook page and vote.Youcan see more images from "Injustice: Gods Among Us" below.

Want more video game news, see awesome video game videos, or just want to talk about games with your fellow gamers? Follow Todd Kenreck, who made this post, byfollowing him on FacebookandTwitter.

Watchour interview with the creators of "Injustice: Gods Among Us"

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See Cyborg and Nightwing in 'Injustice: Gods Among Us'

Nightwing and Cyborg coming to Injustice: Gods Among Us

Comic-Con just opened up its show floor for Preview Night, and in among the booths is a new playable version of Injustice: Gods Among Us , with two new heroes. Nightwing and Cyborg have joined the fight in Netherrealm's gritty fighting game. Nightwing (aka Dick Grayson, the original Robin) is a nimble staff-wielding fighter, and Cyborg is a heavy hitter, with strong close attacks backed up with ...

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Nightwing and Cyborg coming to Injustice: Gods Among Us

Nightwing And Cyborg Join Cast Of Injustice

Batman's ex-sidekick Dick Grayson, AKA Nightwing, and Robocop wannabe Cyborg will be joining the roster of fighters in NetherRealm Studios new DC fighting game Injustice: Gods Among Us. Comic Con 2012 just kicked off with a preview night, and Warner Bros. had two new fighters on demo at their Injustice kiosk. Nightwing is a very nimble fighter who makes use of his arsonal of tools while Cyborg ...

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Nightwing And Cyborg Join Cast Of Injustice

Cyborg Gaming Mouse

Mad Catz menghasilkan peranti permainan PC yang telah semakin popular Amerika; dan ia mudah untuk melihat mengapa. Cyborg M.M.O.7 Gaming Mouse kelihatan seperti ia akan berubah pada bila-bila masa dan mula menembak anda, dan kami tidak akan terkejut jika ia boleh. Ia mempunyai 13 butang yang boleh disesuaikan, enam mod diprogramkan, 6400DPI sensor twin-eye dan [...]

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Cyborg Gaming Mouse

Making Location Services Slick & Simple

Cyborg anthropologist Amber Case teamed up with location whiz Aaron Parecki to build a platform for mobile location services. (Oh, and they're helping save lives.)

Christopher Sturman

Geoloqi

Founders: Amber Case, 26; Aaron Parecki, 27

Year founded: 2010

Location: Portland

2011 Revenue: Undisclosed

2012 Projected Revenue: Undisclosed

Employees: 7

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Making Location Services Slick & Simple

My life as a cyborg

Google is pushing its Project Glass. But one CNET writer spends time with a bevy of cutting edge wearable computers, seeing what it's like to live a computerized life.

Zeal Optics Z3 goggles sport a tiny monitor inside to let skiers track their speed, see vertical distance covered, and even map their location when they connect to a computer later.

SEATTLE -- It was an unseasonably warm June evening, the kind of day locals rave about because they come so rarely. At 6 p.m., I hopped on my bike for an evening spin.

My heart-rate quickly raced up to 157 beats per minute as I picked up my pace to 14 miles per hour up a gradual rise in the road. At the same time, my blood-glucose level dropped to 62 milligrams per deciliter, low, but not dangerously so for a non-diabetic. All in all, pretty solid data, given that the night before I slept six hours and 21 minutes, waking for brief periods 21 times during the night.

Welcome to my cyborg life. Google has generated tons of press in recent days with its Project Glass, computerized glasses that lets users take pictures and find information. But it's hardly the only company pursuing wearable computing. And while Project Glass won't be commercially available for another two years at the earliest, there are plenty of companies selling devices that consumers can slip into and strap on to collect reams of data about their daily lives.

Suunto's Ambit watch, which tracks altitude, location, speed, and heart rate.

To get a glimpse of that future, I strapped on a bunch of those gadgets. Here's what I learned.

In all, the gadgets I tested collectively ran into the thousands of dollars. I was decked out from head --with Zeal Optics Z3 ski googles that track speed and map locations -- to my feet -- with Adidas Resolution running shoes with the company's miCoach Speed_Cell sensor that keeps tabs on speed and distance run. I gathered a ton of information about health and fitness, though it wasn't my most fashion-forward moment. There were times, when wearing everything, I looked like a high school science experiment run amok.

Wearable gadgets have been around for some time. Heart-rate monitors have been standard training devices for athletes for more than a decade. Pods that runners slip into their shoes have been around for years as well. And a new batch of gizmos have emerged that let users keep tabs on the number of steps they've taken, a popular new category that I also sampled.

The business of wearable computing is on the cusp of becoming mainstream. That's because the cost and size of the sensors the devices use has dropped significantly over the years. And the ability to transmit the data those gadgets collect and receive has become seamless as many connect with the mobile smartphones that folks slip into their pockets or purses everyday.

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My life as a cyborg

Cyborg makes art using seventh sense

Liz Else, associate opinion editor

(Image: Dan Wilton/RedBulletin)

Neil Harbisson can only see shades of grey. So his prosthetic eyepiece, which he calls an eyeborg, interprets the colours for him and translates them into sound. Harbissons art sounds like a kind of inverse synaesthesia. But where synaesthetes experience numbers or letters as colours or even taste words, for example, Harbissons art is down to a precise transposition of colour into sound frequencies. As a result, he is able to create facial portraits purely out of sound, and he can tell you that the colour of Mozarts music is mostly yellow. Liz Else caught up with him at the TEDGlobal conference.

When did you realise you were colour blind? When I was a kid they noticed that I had a big problem with colour blindness. They thought it was the normal red-green type, but it wasn't. Eventually, when I was 11 years old, they diagnosed me with achromatopsia, which means I can only see shades of grey. About one in 33,000 people have this type of colour blindness.

What is the gadget you are wearing? It's a sensor that lets me see colours.

How does it work? Colour is basically hue, saturation, and light. Right now, I can see light in shades of grey, but I cant see its saturation or hue. This gadget detects the lights hue, and converts the light into a sound frequency that I can hear as a note [wavelength is inversely proportional to frequency so it can easily convert the wavelength of the light into a sound frequency]. It also translates the saturation of the colour into volume. So if its a vivid red I will hear it more loudly.

All the translation happens in a chip on the back of my neck - it's all held by pressure onto the bone. It stays there all the time when I go to bed. In September I'm having it osteointegrated - which means that part of the device will be put inside my bone in a hospital in Barcelona and then the sound will resonate much better then. It took a year to convince them that it was ethical and part of me.

How long did it take you to learn how to use it? About five weeks but it was five weeks of 24/7. After five weeks my headaches went away and it became automatic. That was in 2004. Now it feels normal.

What is it like? Your world must look very different. Its like an extra sense, a seventh sense. Its not synaesthesia. Synaesthetes see colour. I never do. I hear it through bone and see beyond the normal.

Can you go beyond the normal range of the 300 or so visible hues? I can do infrared spectrum - I see colour that is invisible, like some of the animals that see at night. And also ultraviolet. The thing about UV is that its good to detect it because it damages the skin and I can detect it. I can build a picture that no one else sees.

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Cyborg makes art using seventh sense

Cyborg system stifles your need to drink water

9 hrs.

Morgan Clendaniel , Co.Exist

The Japanese design studio Takram was asked to design a water bottle for people to use after a hypothetical future environmental disaster. Takram, imagining what a world would be like with rising sea levels and radioactive disasters, thought that we probably wouldnt be carrying around water bottles. Instead, they designed an entirely new organ system, to be implanted in the body, that would mean we used less water in the first place.

Its solution, called the Hydrolemic System, involves both harvesting more moisture from the air than our current unmodified bodies are capable of, and also doing more to retain the water we have. The company imagines that system would require us to drink 0.1 cups of water a day.

Inserts that go in our noses convert moisture in the air we breathe into water, and other inserts at the ends of our renal and digestive systems keep water from leaving by those routes. A collar on our neck helps prevent perspiration by turning our body heat into electricity, so it doesnt make us perspire, losing precious liquid.

Click through the slide show for more details.

Let'shope for a world in which our designers are just designing water bottles with more convenient handles, rather than ones you have to go to the hospital to have installed.

Morgan Clendanielis editor of Co.Exist.

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Cyborg system stifles your need to drink water

A message for our cyborg drivers

JUNE 23 — Now, I very seldom broach the topic of statistics because, quite frankly, I let the other Hafiz (my fellow columnist Hafiz Noor Shams) do that.  And when PEMANDU comes out and says that crime rates are dropping nationwide, I would give them the benefit of the doubt. I would. I am that nice.  But when they blame the media for portraying a ...

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A message for our cyborg drivers

Interior-Decorating Androids, Coming to a Living Room Near You

Science fiction robots tend to come from one of two production lines: helpful protocol droids like C-3PO or cyborg Terminators hell-bent on destroying humanity. Few sci-fi storytellers imagined a future where robots would be programmed to master the art of interior decorating. Fortunately for the design-challenged, present-day roboticists have.

RoboFold

For decades, robots have shaped material for cars. Furniture is next. Photo: RoboFold

RoboFold robots treat steel like large origami pieces, bending them into a shape fit for a living room. What does it take to become a furniture-designing robot? A multi-ton arm that can manipulate a 200-pound sheet of materialoh, and a folded-metal-enthusiast creator. That doesnt hurt either.

British designer and RoboFold founder Gregory Epps spent the last decade obsessing about bending metals. He even completed a masters degree at the Royal College of Art that focused on the tools and algorithms that would best shape the material. All the training and tinkering paid off.

Folded designs cut down on material waste. Photo: RoboFold

With RoboFold, designers can fill a room with rippling metal sculptures or futuristic furniture that would be nearly impossible to make by hand or too costly with traditional production processes. Designers just specify their preferred shape via Rhino CAD and the bot jumps into action, carefully working the material into anything from a fashionable coffee table to an angular building facade.

Artaic Mosaics

This is not a photo. It's a robot-made mosaic. Photo: Artaic

Ted Acworth is working to revitalize a craft from the Romanswith robots. His company, Artaic, designs bots that are skilled in the art of mosaic making. Inspired by the pick and place bots used in electronics manufacturing, Acworths clan painstakingly assembles tile images fit for a high-end wash room or the bottom of a rockstars pool.

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Interior-Decorating Androids, Coming to a Living Room Near You

Is that really just a fly? Swarms of cyborg insect drones are the future of military surveillance

By Daily Mail Reporter

PUBLISHED: 11:16 EST, 19 June 2012 | UPDATED: 11:16 EST, 19 June 2012

The kinds of drones making the headlines daily are the heavily armed CIA and U.S. Army vehicles which routinely strike targets in Pakistan - killing terrorists and innocents alike.

But the real high-tech story of surveillance drones is going on at a much smaller level, as tiny remote controlled vehicles based on insects are already likely being deployed.

Over recent years a range of miniature drones, or micro air vehicles (MAVs), based on the same physics used by flying insects, have been presented to the public.

The fear kicked off in 2007 when reports of bizarre flying objects hovering above anti-war protests sparked accusations that the U.S. government was accused of secretly developing robotic insect spies.

Fingertip: The US Air Force unveiled insect-sized spies 'as tiny as bumblebees' that could not be detected and would be able to fly into buildings

Official denials and suggestions from entomologists that they were actually dragonflies failed to quell speculation, and Tom Ehrhard, a retired Air Force colonel and expert on unmanned aerial craft, told the Daily Telegraph at the time that 'America can be pretty sneaky.'

The following year, the US Air Force unveiled insect-sized spies 'as tiny as bumblebees' that could not be detected and would be able to fly into buildings to 'photograph, record, and even attack insurgents and terrorists.'

Around the same time the Air Force also unveiled what it called 'lethal mini-drones' based on Leonardo da Vinci's blueprints for his Ornithopter flying machine, and claimed they would be ready for roll out by 2015.

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Is that really just a fly? Swarms of cyborg insect drones are the future of military surveillance

Amped Shows the Downside of Becoming a Cyborg

As he showed in his bestselling thriller Robopocalypse, Daniel H. Wilson can write. The Carnegie Mellon-trained roboticist, who wrote several books of humorous nonfiction before turning to fiction in 2011, has a voice and style very much like Stephen King. But unlike King, Wilson also has the chops to base the weird beings in his stories on hard science.

Robopocalypse, which Steven Spielberg is turning into a film scheduled for release in 2013, posits a world where robot helpers and all the roboticized machines we come across every day that quietly, if dully, contain enough electronic brainpower to function on their own come under the control of a self-aware supercomputer that tries to take over the Earth from humankind.

In his new novel Amped, Wilson creates a different scenario: reactionary political groups turn their ire against peoplewho use electronic implants to make them normal, or even better than normal. Super-abled. Some of these implants control artificial limbs that give their users superhuman strength. Others, including the Neural Autofocus MK-4 for kids with attention deficit problems have the effect of raising their users IQ to top levels. Reacting to their unfair advantage, the Pure Pride movement succeeds in getting the Supreme Court to rule that implanted Americans do not have the same constitutional rights as other citizens.

Mobs immediately begin targeting anyone they suspect of being an amp, an amplified human. Twenty-nine-year-old Owen Gray sports a tell-tale plastic nub on his forehead, connected to a neural implant he received after suffering brain injury in an accident. But although the implant didnt change his abilities or personality (or so he believed), he finds himself wanted by the authorities along with a rogue squad of ex-soldiers who took part in an experimental military operation involving the mysterious Zenith implant.

As a long-time robot fan, I loved Robopocalypse, which was all the more fun because I was familiar with the different kinds of technology from reading Wilsons earlier books, How to Survive a Robot Uprising and How to Build a Robot Army. Wilsons wide-ranging cast of characters were believable, and its constant change of scene from Japan to the Arctic to London to Oklahoma to New York helped keep the action moving along.

Amped, by contrast, only gives us the American view. And instead of humanity uniting against machines, its neighbor fighting neighbor. The conflict in the story is driven by politics and culture, not technology gone awry (at least, not from the point of view of the good guys). Ironically, the amps themselves, who are accused of using technology to gain an unfair advantage, mainly live in trailer parks and ghettos. Theyre not backed by scientists and high tech labs; in fact, we see them struggle to keep their implants maintained and functioning without the equipment and facilities they need to survive.

So Amped relies a lot more on character and politics, and less on technology. Wilsons ability to make his characters talk like real people is refreshing. But the wheelings and dealings that lead to the government crackdown on amps is less fully fleshed out, and the motivations of the haters is less clear given that theyre all just one medical emergency away from needing some amplification themselves. Still, the issues raised in Amped are fascinating, and the book is fast-paced and easy to read. For hardcore sci-fi readers, Amped offers plenty of juicy details to savor.

If youre curious to see for yourself, the website io9 has previews ofChapters 1-3 and Chapters 4 and 5. And watch later this week for an interview withAmped author Daniel H. Wilson.

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Amped Shows the Downside of Becoming a Cyborg

Cris Cyborg and Sarah Kaufman Mean Mugging on Fight Promo Video: Fan Reaction

Sarah Kaufman is stepping up her media hype game and putting her best mean-mugging face on. She will need both to face off against Ronda Rousey, who trains with the notorious Diaz brothers--both known for their prodigious mean-mugging.

Sarah Kaufman teamed up with Bobby Razak (TapouT Films) and Cris Cyborg

Sarah doesn't strike me as a shy person. She just doesn't have Ronda's gift of gab or her charisma. That doesn't mean that Sarah is going to quietly follow Ronda's marketing trail. She's blazing a trail of her own.

When I heard that the fight between Strikeforce champion Ronda Rousey and former champion Sarah Kaufman had finally been scheduled, I wondered how Sarah would handle the increase in media attention. In her last appearance on the Strikeforce card against Alexis Davis, she was able to focus on fighting. That's how Sarah likes things to work. Sarah is well-known for promoting herself as a fighter and not a talker.

If looks could kill, mean-mugging would be lethal

Based on this video directed by Bobby Razak from TapouT Films and co-featuring Cris Cyborg, things will be different this time around. "Women's MMA: Sarah Kaufman & Cris Cyborg" video

Ladies and gentlemen: start your engines and let the trash-talking begin.

Sarah Kaufman: "Hard workers who put in their time get to the top, not people who just talk and run their mouth." (from the video)

Media Hype and Fight Promotion

This will be Ronda's second time dealing with a heavy interview schedule and dealing with lots of attention from fans and haters on Twitter. For her battle with Miesha Tate, Ronda teased and taunted Miesha and her fans into a frenzy that worked to successfully hype their fight (shown live on Showtime on August 18) to fans who wouldn't ordinarily be interested in watching two women fight. Fans were treated to a daily barrage of new interviews with fresh content--Ronda prides herself on having something different to say in every interview. She is the queen of sound bites.

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Cris Cyborg and Sarah Kaufman Mean Mugging on Fight Promo Video: Fan Reaction

CFT: Star recruit Henry decommits from Georgia

As of a few weeks ago, the idea of a four-team playoff seemed almost inevitable. There was a model (four teams) and what sounded like a general consensus on a couple of important items, such as where the games would be played (semifinals within the bowl system; championship game bid out) and how the field would look (not conference champions-only).

But Dennis Dodd saw the writing on the wall. So did Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany. There were too many issues to resolve and not enough time to do so the deadline was originally June 20 without someone hurting themselves. So, someone(s) in todays BCS meeting probably had a meltdown that morphed into a Lewis Black-like tirade that morphed into the following decision:

The BCS committee will present options plural to the BCS Presidential Oversight Committee on June 26instead of providing just one option. Supposedly, theyll take it from there. I think. Maybe.

Our job is just to narrow and refine the options, Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott said.

What Scott is really saying is that the 11 conference commissioners and Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrickdidnt want the responsibility anymore. So, the BCS committee decided to dump the job on the group that was going to approve/decline a decision anyway.

Here, you take it. No tag-backs!

We made progress in our meeting today to discuss the future of college footballs post-season, a statement from the BCS read. We are approaching consensus on many issues and we recognize there are also several issues that require additional conversations at both the commissioner and university president levels.

We are determined to build upon our successes and create a structure that further grows the sport while protecting the regular season. We also value the bowl tradition and recognize the many benefits it brings to student-athletes.

We have more work to do and more discussions to have with our presidents, who are the parties that will make the final decisions about the future structure of college footballs post-season.

Conveniently, thechair of thePresidential Oversight Committee, Virginia Tech President Charles Steger, also issued the following statement earlier today saying the group is up to the task:

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CFT: Star recruit Henry decommits from Georgia

Hugh Laurie is being lined up to star in 'RoboCop'

Hugh is set to play the villainous CEO of Omni Corp, which creates the title character for its own gain.

This will be Hugh's first high profile film role since his eight season stint on TV show 'House' ended.

It was previously revealed that Gary Oldam will star as Norton, a scientist who creates the technology that brings the titular super-human cyborg to life in the MGM reboot.

Gary's alter-ego will find himself torn between Hugh's character and the machine who is trying to rediscover his humanity.

Abbie Cornish is in talks to play Murphy's wife, who is led to believe her husband has been killed in the line of duty while Samuel L. Jackson will take on the role of "charismatic media mogul" Pat Novak.

The movie is due to begin shooting in Toronto, Canada, this September and scheduled to be released next summer.

A total of three 'RoboCop' films were made between 1987 and 1993, with the first making $53.4 million at the box office, while the third made just $10.6 million.

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Hugh Laurie is being lined up to star in 'RoboCop'

Hugh Laurie set to play villain in Robocop remake

British actor in negotiations to join the cast of José Padilha's remake of Paul Verhoeven's film about a cyborg crimefighter Hugh Laurie is in negotiations to join what is shaping up to be an impressive cast for Elite Squad director José Padilha's upcoming Robocop remake, according to the Hollywood Reporter . If he signs on to play the main villain the British actor will join Joel Kinnaman, star ...

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Hugh Laurie set to play villain in Robocop remake

Hugh Laurie – Hugh Laurie To Play Robocop Villain

Hugh Laurie is being lined up to play the villainous CEO of Omni Corp which creates a super-human cyborg for it's own gain in the 'RoboCop' remake.

Hugh Laurie is being lined up to star in 'RoboCop'.

The 'House' actor is currently in negotiations to play the main villain in the Jose Padilha directed movie, which features police officer Alex Murphy (Joel Kinnaman) who is brutally murdered and subsequently re-created as a super-human cyborg.

Hugh is set to play the villainous CEO of Omni Corp, which creates the title character for its own gain.

This will be Hugh's first high profile film role since his eight season stint on TV show 'House' ended.

It was previously revealed that Gary Oldam will star as Norton, a scientist who creates the technology that brings the titular super-human cyborg to life in the MGM reboot.

Gary's alter-ego will find himself torn between Hugh's character and the machine who is trying to rediscover his humanity.

Abbie Cornish is in talks to play Murphy's wife, who is led to believe her husband has been killed in the line of duty while Samuel L. Jackson will take on the role of ''charismatic media mogul'' Pat Novak.

The movie is due to begin shooting in Toronto, Canada, this September and scheduled to be released next summer.

A total of three 'RoboCop' films were made between 1987 and 1993, with the first making $53.4 million at the box office, while the third made just $10.6 million.

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Hugh Laurie - Hugh Laurie To Play Robocop Villain